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Her Majesty's Government how many (1) legally qualified staff, and (2) staff without
legal qualifications, now working in the Department for Exiting the European Union
(a) have been transferred from, or (b) are on secondment from, the Ministry of Justice.

<p>The Department is recruiting the brightest and the best from across the civil service,
the wider public sector and the private sector. The Department for Exiting the European
Union now has over 450 staff, and is growing fast. The Department for Exiting the
European Union obtains its legal advice from the Government Legal Department. We will
not be providing a running commentary on particular groups of staff as recruitment
is ongoing and numbers are regularly changing. We will ensure we have the right skills
to get the best deal for the UK.</p>

To ask Her Majesty's Government, further to the Written Answer by Lord Taylor of Holbeach
on 6 May (WA 322), what form the review of asylum support rates will take; and which
stakeholders will be consulted.

<p> </p><p> </p><p> </p><p>The review is an internal Home Office one, to ensure that
the payments provided to destitute asylum seekers are sufficient to cover their essential
living needs consistent with the judgement of 9 April. The Home Office has met with
represenatives of &quot;Still Human Still Here&quot;, a coalition of organisations
with an established interest in the issue. The review will take full account of both
their views and the details of the judgment of 9 April.</p><p> </p><p> </p><p> </p>

To ask Her Majesty’s Government what discussions they will hold with the Competition
and Markets Authority and the National Trading Standards Board in the light of the
recommendations of the Waterson Review on secondary ticketing published on 26 May.

<p>This Government was elected with a mandate to reform and modernise the UK human
rights framework. A Bill of Rights will protect fundamental human rights, but also
prevent their abuse and restore some common sense to the system. <br><br>Our plans
do not involve us leaving the European Convention on Human Rights. That is neither
our objective nor our policy. However, our number one priority is to restore some
balance to our human rights laws, so no option is off the table for the future.<br><br>
We will consult fully before introducing legislation and will bring forward proposals
for a British Bill of Rights in due course.</p>